259 research outputs found
Quantum harmonic oscillator with superoscillating initial datum
In this paper we study the evolution of superoscillating initial data for the
quantum driven harmonic oscillator. Our main result shows that
superoscillations are amplified by the harmonic potential and that the analytic
solution develops a singularity in finite time. We also show that for a large
class of solutions of the Schr\"odinger equation, superoscillating behavior at
any given time implies superoscillating behavior at any other time.Comment: 12 page
Geometric Path Integrals. A Language for Multiscale Biology and Systems Robustness
In this paper we suggest that, under suitable conditions, supervised learning
can provide the basis to formulate at the microscopic level quantitative
questions on the phenotype structure of multicellular organisms. The problem of
explaining the robustness of the phenotype structure is rephrased as a real
geometrical problem on a fixed domain. We further suggest a generalization of
path integrals that reduces the problem of deciding whether a given molecular
network can generate specific phenotypes to a numerical property of a
robustness function with complex output, for which we give heuristic
justification. Finally, we use our formalism to interpret a pointedly
quantitative developmental biology problem on the allowed number of pairs of
legs in centipedes
On the problem of mass-dependence of the two-point function of the real scalar free massive field on the light cone
We investigate the generally assumed inconsistency in light cone quantum
field theory that the restriction of a massive, real, scalar, free field to the
nullplane is independent of mass \cite{LKS}, but the
restriction of the two-point function depends on it (see, e.g., \cite{NakYam77,
Yam97}). We resolve this inconsistency by showing that the two-point function
has no canonical restriction to in the sense of distribution theory.
Only the so-called tame restriction of the two-point function exists which we
have introduced in \cite{Ull04sub}. Furthermore, we show that this tame
restriction is indeed independent of mass. Hence the inconsistency appears only
by the erroneous assumption that the two-point function would have a
(canonical) restriction to .Comment: 10 pages, 2 figure
2.11. Necessary conditions for interpolation by entire functions
Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/41580/1/10958_2005_Article_BF01221572.pd
Spherical Spectral Synthesis and Two-Radius Theorems on Damek-Ricci Spaces
We prove that spherical spectral analysis and synthesis hold in Damek-Ricci
spaces and derive two-radius theorems
Boundary Conditions for Singular Perturbations of Self-Adjoint Operators
Let A:D(A)\subseteq\H\to\H be an injective self-adjoint operator and let
\tau:D(A)\to\X, X a Banach space, be a surjective linear map such that
\|\tau\phi\|_\X\le c \|A\phi\|_\H. Supposing that \text{\rm Range}
(\tau')\cap\H' =\{0\}, we define a family of self-adjoint
operators which are extensions of the symmetric operator .
Any in the operator domain is characterized by a sort
of boundary conditions on its univocally defined regular component \phireg,
which belongs to the completion of D(A) w.r.t. the norm \|A\phi\|_\H. These
boundary conditions are written in terms of the map , playing the role of
a trace (restriction) operator, as \tau\phireg=\Theta Q_\phi, the extension
parameter being a self-adjoint operator from X' to X. The self-adjoint
extension is then simply defined by A^\tau_\Theta\phi:=A \phireg. The case in
which is a convolution operator on LD, T a distribution with
compact support, is studied in detail.Comment: Revised version. To appear in Operator Theory: Advances and
Applications, vol. 13
On the injectivity of the circular Radon transform arising in thermoacoustic tomography
The circular Radon transform integrates a function over the set of all
spheres with a given set of centers. The problem of injectivity of this
transform (as well as inversion formulas, range descriptions, etc.) arises in
many fields from approximation theory to integral geometry, to inverse problems
for PDEs, and recently to newly developing types of tomography. The article
discusses known and provides new results that one can obtain by methods that
essentially involve only the finite speed of propagation and domain dependence
for the wave equation.Comment: To appear in Inverse Problem
Uniqueness of reconstruction and an inversion procedure for thermoacoustic and photoacoustic tomography
The paper contains a simple approach to reconstruction in Thermoacoustic and
Photoacoustic Tomography. The technique works for any geometry of point
detectors placement and for variable sound speed satisfying a non-trapping
condition. A uniqueness of reconstruction result is also obtained
Initial-boundary value problems for discrete evolution equations: discrete linear Schrodinger and integrable discrete nonlinear Schrodinger equations
We present a method to solve initial-boundary value problems for linear and
integrable nonlinear differential-difference evolution equations. The method is
the discrete version of the one developed by A. S. Fokas to solve
initial-boundary value problems for linear and integrable nonlinear partial
differential equations via an extension of the inverse scattering transform.
The method takes advantage of the Lax pair formulation for both linear and
nonlinear equations, and is based on the simultaneous spectral analysis of both
parts of the Lax pair. A key role is also played by the global algebraic
relation that couples all known and unknown boundary values. Even though
additional technical complications arise in discrete problems compared to
continuum ones, we show that a similar approach can also solve initial-boundary
value problems for linear and integrable nonlinear differential-difference
equations. We demonstrate the method by solving initial-boundary value problems
for the discrete analogue of both the linear and the nonlinear Schrodinger
equations, comparing the solution to those of the corresponding continuum
problems. In the linear case we also explicitly discuss Robin-type boundary
conditions not solvable by Fourier series. In the nonlinear case we also
identify the linearizable boundary conditions, we discuss the elimination of
the unknown boundary datum, we obtain explicitly the linear and continuum limit
of the solution, and we write down the soliton solutions.Comment: 41 pages, 3 figures, to appear in Inverse Problem
- …